In 2012, Razer came to CES with a conceptual gaming tablet that the company called Project Fiona which evolved into Razer Edge once the company came to CES 2013. For this year’s CES, Razer once again showed up at Las Vegas with another radical conceptual product in the form of Project Christine.

Essentially, Razer’s Project Christine is a modular PC which means each major components in the system are separated into modules. Thanks to its plug-and-play nature, this allow users to add and remove components from the PC easily without the need to use any tools or managing messy cables. Apart from utilizing PCI-Express architecture for the system’s backbone, Razer also envisioned the modules to have active liquid cooling and noise cancelation capabilities as well.

The system also features a LED touchscreen display as its control centre and support quad SLI graphics cards setup as well as solid state drive and RAID 5 hard drive array. However, the Project Christine does not have any release date or price tag at the moment as it is currently just a conceptual system.

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Originally deep in the eSports arena before making a move into the world of consumer tech, his current love are but not exclusive to PC hardware, gaming peripherals/system, fitness tech, virtual/augmented/mixed reality, and Microsoft products.
Has soft spot for Nokia devices.
No, Chapree is not his real name but he doesn't mind.